Cyathea columbiana Domin (1929: 263)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.26.1.6 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6446F468-7634-0A70-7DC4-FD781EE5FA75 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cyathea columbiana Domin (1929: 263) |
status |
|
22. Cyathea multiflora Smith (1793: 416) View in CoL . Hemitelia multiflora (Sm.) Sprengel (1827: 126) . Alsophila multiflora (Sm.) Presl (1836: 61) . Amphicosmia multiflora (Sm.) Gardner (1842: 441) . Type:—“Amer. Merid.,” Shakespeare s.n. (holotype BM [Herb. Banks], photo GH, NY, US, fragment US). Hemitelia denticulata Hooker (1865: 31) . Type:— PITCAIRN ISLANDS. “Elizabeth Island” (= Henderson
Island), Cuming 1360 (holotype K). Holttum (1964: 274) excludes these specimens from Pacific species
of Cyathea sensu lato. Fosberg et al. (1983) do not report any tree fern from Henderson Island. Most
likely, a labeling error occurred. Cuming collected mainly seashells in the southeastern Pacific and
ventured from Chile, via Ecuador and Panama, north to Mexico. Tryon (1976) thinks that the specimen
was probably collected in Panama. Hemitelia obscura Mettenius (1864: 264) . Cyathea columbiana Domin (1929: 263) , nom. nov. for Hemitelia
obscura Mett. , not Cyathea obscura (Mett.) Copeland (1909: 37) . Type:— COLOMBIA. “Prov. de
Barbacoas, via de Tuquerres,” 1600 m, Triana s.n. (holotype not located, W?, isotypes, COL-fragment
GH, K-fragment NY, P).
Distribution and habitat: — Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, in humid to wet forests between 400–1400 m.
Remarks: — Cyathea multiflora as defined here is restricted to Mesoamerica and the slopes of the western Andes. The species forms regional variations that cannot be clearly separated. Plants from the northern Andes have relatively large arching indusia and form the basis for Hemitelia obscura (= C. colombiana ). Some populations in southern Ecuador produce almost black petiole scales at the petiole bases, but have the characteristic reddish brown scales in the upper parts. Plants from Costa Rica have mostly small indusia and a variable amount of hairs on the laminae abaxially.
K |
Royal Botanic Gardens |
W |
Naturhistorisches Museum Wien |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.